The New Boy Short Film -

Thornton, also the cinematographer, bathes the monastery in twilight and dust. The film’s slow cinema aesthetic—long takes of dirt, flies, and sleeping bodies—serves a political function. Time does not progress linearly; it loops. The boys sleep on dirt floors; the nun drinks herself into stupor. This stasis represents the eschatological trap of Christian mission life: a waiting room for a salvation that never arrives. The “new boy” refuses to sleep inside, instead sleeping under the Southern Cross. Here, the celestial becomes the site of resistance: his dreams are not of heaven but of ancestral songlines.

The film’s last shot shows the new boy walking into the bush, the nails now worn as a necklace. He has not rejected the Christian object; he has recontextualized it as a bone or a stone. Thornton thus offers a third space beyond resistance or assimilation: syncretic indifference . The boy is not saved, nor damned. He is simply present. The final sound is not a hymn but the crackle of a campfire. The paper concludes that The New Boy proposes that true decolonization occurs when the colonizer’s symbols become meaningless artifacts, while the land’s sovereignty is reasserted through the child’s body as a living archive. the new boy short film

Central to the paper is the film’s redefinition of the crucifix. When the nun removes the nails, the boy’s wounds do not heal into stigmata (a Christian sign of divine favor). Instead, they become antennae . Thornton employs subjective sound design: after his wounds are dressed, the boy hears the earth’s hum, the creaking of ghost gums, and the whispers of the dead. The crucifixion, re-performed by an Indigenous body, short-circuits Christian atonement. It becomes an act of cosmic listening . Thornton, also the cinematographer, bathes the monastery in

Sister Eileen is a unique colonial figure: a doubting missionary who has lost her own faith. She attempts to “save” the boy through baptism, but the water turns red (a striking practical effect). The paper argues that Eileen represents the liberal colonial fantasy—the belief that kindness can neutralize structural violence. Her failure is not villainy but tragedy. When she finally sees the boy’s levitation, she does not convert; she collapses. The film suggests that the settler psyche cannot integrate Indigenous metaphysics without self-annihilation. The boys sleep on dirt floors; the nun

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